The Giving Jar

Train up a child in the way he should go; even when he is old he will not depart from it. Proverbs 22:6 (ESV)
As a child, I received a weekly allowance. Before I could decide which Beanie Baby to buy, I was instructed to place one dollar in my savings jar, and one dollar in my giving jar.
I admit, I deposited those coins with reluctance at first. Two fewer dollars meant I would have to wait until next week to get Peanut the Elephant. But as the loonies accumulated, it excited me to think of all the ways I could make a difference in the world with my giving jar.
As I decorated that jar with colourful pompoms and glitter, I imagined buying a goat from one of those Christmas giving catalogues, and strolling the aisles of the local dollar store to pack a shoebox for a child just like me.
While it involved discipline and hardship (for an eight-year old), this practice instilled in me the joy of giving.
Today, I approach giving in much the same way. Rather than thinking that I must give because it is the Biblical, charitable, or ‘right’ thing to do, I set aside a portion of my income for the freedom to give. With these funds, I can dream about all the ways I’d like to shine God’s light in the world.
I don’t know about you, but I want to do immeasurably more in this life than I have the ability to do. I long to see families able to provide for themselves; to see students’ hearts transformed by the gospel; to see women freed from abusive situations; and to see the hungry fed with dignity.
When I support ministries that do the things I wish I could do, I feel that I am there with them. I get to be in Ethiopia, planting gardens alongside the local community members; having coffee and praying with a student in Italy; opening the door for a woman to attend a support group in the city I used to call home; and handing bags of groceries to my very own neighbours.
Second Corinthians 9:7 tells us that God loves a cheerful giver. Many of us hesitate to give because we think of the bills we need to pay and the myriad things we could otherwise buy with that money. What would it look like to instead approach giving the way a child watches the coins accumulating in her sparkly giving jar, with joyful expectation of how God might use them to transform His Kingdom?
*Julia Buckingham is a young professional working in Ottawa. She recently completed her master's degree in Rome, Italy and is passionate about the stewardship of God's good gifts.









